Red Bluff Daily News

January 03, 2013

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Thursday, January 3, 2013 ��� Daily News Obituaries MARY SOPHIA UNDERWOOD May 11, 1928 - December 26, 2012 Mary Sophia Underwood, 84, of Corning passed away at her home peacefully on December 26. Mary was born to James and Josephine Jensen in Safford, AZ. She was a homemaker and loving mother, grandmother, and great grandmother. She found great joy in quilting, providing quilts to all of her family members. She loved to read and was a whiz at crossword puzzles. She enjoyed spending time with her brothers and sisters playing cards. Mary was a lady of tremendous courage and strength. A gentle and kind spirit that was deeply loved and will be forever missed. She is survived by her sister; Lita Wilson and brothers; Jimmy and Dryden Jensen, 5 children; John Woody Thompson, Karl Wayne Thompson, Sidney Charles Thompson, Mary Jo Limas, and Robert Burns Underwood II, 5 Grandchildren, and 11 great grandchildren. A viewing will be held Thursday, January 3, from 4-7 pm at Hall Brothers Funeral Home in Corning. Death Notices Death notices must be provided by mortuaries to the news department, are published at no charge, and feature only specific basic information about the deceased. Paid obituaries are placed through the Classified advertising department. Paid obituaries may be placed by mortuaries or by families of the deceased and include online publication linked to the newspaper���s website. Paid obituaries may be of any length, may run multiple days and offer wide latitude of content, including photos. Maxine R. Handel Maxine R. Handel of Proberta died Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2013, at St. Elizabeth Community Hospital in Red Bluff. She was 76. Hoyt-Cole Chapel of the Flowers is handling the arrangements. Published Thursday, Jan. 3, 2013, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. Mary Ann Simons Mary Ann Simons of Red bluff died Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2013, at St. Elizabeth Community Hospital in Red Bluff. She was 91. Red Bluff Simple Cremations & Burial Service is handling the arrangements. Published Thursday, Jan. 3, 2013, in the Daily News, Red Bluff, Calif. TURF Continued from page 1A EVANGELINA MARIA MAREZ Evangelina Maria Marez was born in Puerto De Luna, New Mexico on April 8, 1929. In 1950 she married her high school sweetheart and love of her life, Charles Garduno. The were married for 63 years. Evangelina and Charles moved to California where they had five children; Michael, Johnny, Pauline, Susan, and Jackie. Evangelina loved her family and spent her later years enjoying her grandchildren, camping, rafting, Christmas tree hunting, sewing, and cooking. Friend, sister, grandma, mamma, or Eva, whatever you knew her as; she will be missed and remembered. We love you. Memorial service will be on Friday, January 4, at 11:00 a.m. at: Chapel Of The Flowers 816, Walnut St. Red Bluff, CA. soil and seed are needed more immediately than monetary contributions since they don���t know PAULINE LAUDERDALE be was asked about legislation he might introduce early on. One top item is permit approval and funding for rebuilding the J levee, to protect Hamilton City from flooding. Also, he said, the legislation that created the Quincy Library Group project has expired. ���We'll have to do something about that,��� he said. ���We don't want to lose Calif. citrus growers appear to have beaten frost FRESNO (AP) ��� Citrus growers in California���s Central Valley appear to have escaped with little or no crop damage after a series of unusually cold nights. Officials with the citrus growers association, California Citrus Mutual, said Wednesday temperatures were not low enough over a long enough period this week to cause significant damage. The National Weather Service in Hanford on Sunday issued a freeze watch for the region, with nighttime temperatures expected to dip to 26 degrees in some areas. Prolonged temperatures in the mid-20s can damage citrus crops. what a landscaper might the Little Leaguers won the Northern California say needs to be done. state championship. Either way McMahan On the bright side the said she has no doubts the Red Bluff community will organization had recently step up once again in sup- purchased a new sprinkler port of the program as it system, but had yet to did two years ago when install it. what we gained.��� The project is a pilot program that allows for thinning certain national forest areas with the goal of enabling them to better resist wildfires. It involved compromises between timber interests and environmental groups. LaMalfa said he planned to work with Sen. Dianne Feinstein on this issue and other matters affecting Northern California. Feinstein and Herger co-authored the original Quincy Library CLIFF Continued from page 1A ty Economic Development Corp. projected that automatic spending cuts would have brought a loss of $22.7 billion in gross state product ��� the annual measure of goods and services produced in California. It also could have meant the loss of 225,000 jobs statewide. Kimberly Ritter-Martinez, associate economist at the organization, said the 2 percent payroll tax could still mean fewer movies and dinners out for many families, while higher taxes on the wealthy could mean they have less money to invest or spend. The changes ������seem like they���re small or affecting just a small number of people, but each one of these things has an impact and it can multiply throughout the economy,������ Ritter-Martinez said. State experts said it will take weeks to study the impact of the federal legislation on California���s economy and state budget. The nonpartisan Leg- Subject of state���s first Silver Alert found ELK GROVE (AP) ��� An 82-year-old Sacramentoarea man who went missing, prompting the state���s firstever Silver Alert, has been found. Authorities tell the Sacramento Bee that Robert Grappi was discovered Wednesday morning after police in Nevada County conducted a vehicle stop. Grappi left his Elk Grove home Monday and was believed to have been driving to his son���s house in Nevada County. Elk Grove police say he has shown signs of dementia. A Silver Alert went out for him the next morning after he was reported missing. It was the state���s first Silver Alert ��� a program that went into effect this year. The California Highway Patrol asks news media, law enforcement and the public for help in locating elderly individuals believed to be at risk. Unlike Amber Alerts, the system used to locate missing children, Silver Alerts do not show up on electronic highway signs. McMahan said more locks and gates will be installed around the field to prevent a future incident. It���s something she said they���ve never had to do before. fight and was later arrested for public intoxication. His bail was $250. Webb was charged with obstruction of an officer with threats of violence, mayhem, criminal threats, battery of a peace officer and resisting a peace officer. His bail was $171,000. Group bill. ���The speaker told us in an orientation, ���You freshmen will be dealing with issues of an unusual magnitude���,��� LaMalfa said, adding there's no doubt he was right. There will be the question of extending the debt ceiling, he said. And ���long-term fixes are needed on food stamps, Medicare, Social Security and the military,��� he said. They need fixes because ���they don't stay in the black,��� he said. And then there's the Pizza and Pasta, The Melon Patch, M&M Ranch House, Northern California Child Development Inc., Continued from page 1A Raleys, Tremont Creamery and Food Maxx, Little Creations, Luigis Cafe, Umpqua Bank, Wells Fargo Bank, We Shoot Ya Photography, BABY reported incomes of $400,000 or more, according to 2009 statistics from the California Franchise Tax Board, the latest data available. Forecasters had predicted California would fall back into recession if all the federal tax breaks were allowed to expire and government spending was slashed. Some observers still HURLEY L BARBER fear the two-month delay February 29, 1932 - December 27, 2012 Hurley Lee Barber age 80, died on Dec. 27, 2012 peace- in negotiations about fully at home in Red Bluff after a battle with cancer, com- spending and the federal plicated by pneumonia. He was born in Los Molinos, CA., debt could cause businesson leap year, Feb. 29th, 1932. His parents were Lile and Gunhild (Paulson) Barber.He attended and graduated es and investors to hold from Red Bluff schools, and enlisted in the Navy in 1952. back. He married Carolyn J. Hacker in July 1954. He was a Let������Part of the fiscal cliff ter Carrier for nearly 20 years. His main route was down- was postponed for two town Red Bluff. He was also a Volunteer Fireman and served as Fire Marshall. His favorite hobby was gathering months, so it���s still there,������ said Jerry Nickelsburg, friends & sharing laughter. He is survived by his wife; Carolyn J. Barber of 58 years, his Daughter���s; Denise & economics professor at the Dennis Daugherty, Deann Barber & John Beltran and UCLA Anderson School Bonnie Barber, all of Red Bluff. One Son, William Barber, of Management. ������We just also of Red Bluff. Grandchildren; Todd (Raelyn) Daugherty of Denair, Ca.. Tara (Keith) Johnston of Richfield, Ca., changed it from one fiscal Dustyn Yancy, Cody Yancy & Seth Murchison, all of Red cliff into two.������ Bluff. Dejon (Scott) Weldon of Santa Cruz, CA. And Ten The Los Angeles CounGreat Grandchildren, all of CA. Services will be held at the Presbyterian Church, 838 Jefferson St. in Red Bluff, CA., at 10am on Saturday, January 5th, 2013. Reception will immediately follow. A private family burial will be held at a later date at Oak Hill Cemetery in Red Bluff. Contributions maybe made to the Norbert Rocha Endowment for Cancer Research at UC Davis, CA. 916-734-9416 ask for Beth, The Volunteer Fireman Fund in Red Bluff, St. Elizabeth Hospice of Red Bluff, CA., and Mercy Hospital Hospice of Redding, CA. A 22-year-old Red Bluff man was arrested near Franklin and Cedar streets Tuesday afternoon after police received reports he was trying to steal dogs and chasing children. Red Bluff police officers were called around 2 p.m. to the area for a report of a man who was believed to have attempted to steal a dog fro a resident. Additional phone calls advised that Timothy Robbins was in possession of a knife and chasing children. Officers arrived and found Robbins in an alley near Cedar Street. He was ���uncooperative and very fidgety,��� a department press release said. Robbins was not found in possession of a knife, but the department described his behavior as abnormal. Officers notified Robbins��� probation officer, who arrived on scene and took him into custody for a parole violation. No one was injured and no victims were located or identified. split lower lip and a second employee, who was bit on the arm, had flaps of skin pulled away from his forearm. Continued from page 1A Webb was eventually detained, the arm and threatened to hurt and but while in handcuffs he spit on a kill everyone involved. responding sheriff������s deputy. One employee was left with a Harvey was also involved in the Continued from page 1A November 7, 1922 - December 30, 2012 Pauline Lauderdale 90 years old from Red Bluff, CA., passed away at Great Oak���s Nursing Home in Rigby ID. Pauline was born on November 7, 1922 in Wade, OK., to Myrtle and Olar Rollins. In 1939 she married James Lauderdale. Together they had four children. Pauline was very devoted to her family and enjoyed cooking and spending time with them. She loved tending to her rose bushes. Pauline worked in the shipyard���s in Richmond, CA. during WWII. This was a job she was very proud of and talked about often. She is survived by two sons; Larry (Amy) Lauderdale of Red Bluff, Joel Lauderdale of Red Bluff, two granddaughter���s, six great-grandchildren, and four great-great grandchildren, sister; Claudia (Al) Kastor of Bartlesville, OK and numerous nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her husband; James Lauderdale, son; Billy Wayne, daughter; Paula Rhoades, and granddaughter; Ruchelle Lauderdale. Services will be held at 1:00 p.m. on January 5, at Halls Brother���s Mortuary in Corning, CA. There will be a viewing one hour prior to the services and will be buried at Tehama Cemetery. Man arrested after reports of chasing kids, stealing dogs CASINO EAGER 7A Affordable Care Act (Obamacare), which he called ���a house of cards.��� LaMalfa said he's received some help preparing for the next two years from Herger and his staff. ���They've been great,��� he said. ���Wally will continue to be a resource for me.��� Staff writer Larry Mitchell can be reached at 8967759, lmitchell@chicoer. com, or on Twitter @LarryMitchell7. Walmart and Wholesome Goods. ��������� Julie Zeeb can be reached at 527-2153, extension 115 or jzeeb@redbluffdailynews.com. Follow her on Twitter @DN_Zeeb. islative Analyst���s Office warned that California also could have lost as much as $11 billion in tax revenue if the nation fell back into recession. That would wipe out the bulk of tax gains under Proposition 30, a set of temporary sales and income taxes hikes voters approved in November. The state relies heavily on high-income earners, who now will be hit with multiple tax increases ��� at the state level under Proposition 30 and on the federal level because of the expiring Bush-era tax cuts. The analyst���s office had projected a much smaller deficit of $1.9 billion for the next fiscal year on the assumption that Washington would avoid the fiscal cliff. Additional data will be available as taxpayers make estimated payments this month and begin filing final returns or making extension payments between now and April. ������It will take months, in other words, to understand this aspect of the fiscal cliff better,������ said Deputy Legislative Analyst Jason Sisney. On Wednesday, the California Employment Development Department said the state should be able to avoid an interruption to unemployment benefits if federal lawmakers don���t make any significant changes. Dr. Paul Phinney, president of the California Medical Association, said the fiscal cliff deal brought a mixed blessing to physicians, a vast majority of whom accept Medicare. ������We���re pleased that they did that but the lastminute deals like this are really disruptive to practices and to continuity of care,������ Phinney said. ������There are a lot of physicians that have spent the last several weeks trying to figure out what they were going to do if these cuts would have gone into effect.������ CARE TO COMMENT? At redbluffdailynews.com, scroll to the end of any story, click the link and type away.

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